Tharisa delivers another record production quarter

10th July 2017 By: Martin Creamer - Creamer Media Editor

Tharisa delivers another record production quarter

Tharisa, headed by CEO Phoevos Pouroulis
Photo by: Duane Daws

JOHANNESBURG (miningweekly.com) – Platinum group metals (PGM) and chrome producer Tharisa, which has again shown incremental improvements in production volumes and recoveries in the three months to June 30, is continuing to examine ways of further optimising its operations.

The Johannesburg Stock Exchange-listed Tharisa, headed by CEO Phoevos Pouroulis, on Monday reported record third-quarter chrome production of 333 900 t, 1%-above-target chrome recoveries of 66% and 1.3%-above-target PGM recoveries of 81.3%.

Reef mined from Tharisa’s shallow opencast mine totalled a record 1 275 200 t, PGM production was 3.2% higher quarter-on-quarter at 35 400 oz on a six element (6E) basis, and chrome production was 6.1% higher at 333 900 t. 

Specialty chrome concentrates, which make up 26.1% of total chrome production and which are sold into the chemical and foundry markets globally at a premium, increased 15.5% quarter-on-quarter to a record 87 100 t.

Signs that prices have found a floor are detected by Tharisa, which reports increased price stability within the chrome concentrate market against the background of the fundamentals of the global stainless steel market remaining robust, the company said in a release to Creamer Media’s Mining Weekly Online.

The average PGM basket price of $792/oz (R10 443/oz) in the three months to June 30 was $9/oz higher than the $783/oz (R10 355/oz) price achieved in the previous three months to March 31. 

PGM and chrome production remains on track to meet production guidance for the financial year of 147 400 oz of PGMs on 6E basis and 1.3-million tonnes of chrome concentrates, of which 300 000 t will be price-premium-attracting specialty grade chrome concentrates. 

Tharisa, which is transitioning from contract mining done by MCC Contracts to owner mining, believes that the change in the operating model will have both cost and operational benefits. 

Already developed are engineering and geological skills integral to in-house mining and the successful conclusion of the acquisition process will ensure an uninterrupted changeover.

With the 18-year life of the opencast mine and an estimated 40-year underground mine life potential thereafter, the taking over of the mining task is seen as a logical progression towards cost and operational benefits.